FOR VALOUR
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The VC General of the Boer War |
General Redvers Buller was decorated
with the Victoria Cross for his heroic actions in the Zulu War. But
his distinguished career came to an abrupt end after military failings.
Inside Out looks at his story and the Victoria Cross.
In Exeter,
a statute dominates one end of Queen Street.
General Sir Redvers Buller VC, resplendent on horseback, cuts a dash whist
hundreds may daily pass him totally oblivious to his courage.
Note the
letters VC after his name.
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The
VC - 'For Valour' |
He was one
of only 1,345 courageous servicemen to have received the award and although
a controversial figure, his military actions were heroic.
The Victoria
Cross (VC) is a military award "For Valour", and is only awarded
for actions "in the presence of the enemy".
It was the
General's actions "in the face of the enemy" that led to his
citation.
Valorous actions
On March
28, 1879, in the South African Zulu War, the, then, Lieutenant Colonel
Buller was being hotly pursued by ferocious Zulus during the retreat from
lnhlobana.
With little
thought for his own safety, he rescued a young Captain of the Cape Frontier
Light Horse and carried him on his own horse until he overtook the rearguard
to safety.
And, on the
same day, under the same circumstances, he executed another emergency
evacuation when he carried a lieutenant, whose horse had been killed under
him, to a place of safety.
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The
Battle of Spion Kop was a bloody affair |
Undaunted
in the same action, his valorous deeds went on - he saved a trooper whose
horse was exhausted, and who would otherwise have been killed by the Zulus
who were within yards of him.
Who could
argue with the award of the VC for such courage?
Chinese legacy
The VC was
instituted in 1856 by Royal Warrant of Queen Victoria but was also awarded
retrospectively to the autumn of 1854 to span the period of the Crimean
War.
Queen Victoria
made the first presentations in Hyde Park herself in June, 1857, decorating
62 officers and men for their heroic actions in that war.
Each coveted
decoration is made by a small and not too conspicuous jewellers in Burlington
Gardens in London - Messrs Hancocks & Co.
VCs in Figures |
Up to 1914 - 522
World War I - 633
US unknown solider - 1
Between World Wars - 5
World War II - 182
Since World War II - 9
Total - 1352
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They fashion
them from cuttings from the bronze of a Chinese cannon captured from the
Russians at the siege of Sebastopol (1854 - 55).
The last
time metal was needed for a batch of VC medals, in 1959, an amount of
bronze weighing in at 50 ounces was supplied to the jewellers.
Each time
a VC medal is required, the metal is hewn from the cannon's cascabel -
a large knob at the rear of the cannon that held ropes used when the cannon
was being man-handled. The two cannons, minus their cascabels, are currently
outside the Officers' Mess in Woolwich.
Battling
Boers
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The
British troops suffered huge losses at the hands of the Boers |
But, even
with the decoration of his VC, General Sir Redvers Buller, was not without
his critics.
Twenty years
on, in 1899, General Buller was put in charge of some 50,000 troops sent
to quell the Boers' uprising in South Africa.
Despite being
reluctant at the age of 60, he did not refuse the order. His reluctance
was founded on his knowledge of the formidable Boers.
Whatever
his private doubts, Buller set off for South Africa, but the Boers were
ready - well armed with modern German Mauser rifles, and well dug in with
elaborate defences - determined to stop Buller.
The plans
of one battle, at Coleno, went so desperately wrong for the British forces,
and despite them being beaten by the tenacious Boers, they won a further
seven VCs while retrieving their naval field guns to try and sustain their
positions.
In a later
action at Spion Kop, further delays and confusion resulted in another
disaster.
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The
British troops were taught a tactical lesson by the Boers |
The aftermath
was horrendous - 243 British dead, many lying in make shift trenches.
They had not taken enough shovels to dig proper trenches.
Buller unbeaten
Buller's
well-organised withdrawal was captured by the some of the first moving
picture cameras of war. But the reputation of the British command had
been badly damaged and Buller knew that he had to accept responsibility.
The War itself
continued for a further two years leaving over 22,000 British dead. After
Buller departed, the Boers continued with a campaign of guerrilla fighting.
In Britain,
the establishment was looking for someone to blame, and following an after
dinner speech in which the General was more than forthright with his views,
he was requested to resign.
He refused
- but that request was followed through.
The General
returned to his beloved Downes House, Crediton - bloodied but most definitely
unbowed.
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General Buller was alive to witness the unveiling of his own statue |
The public
rallied to his support, and in 1905 a statue was erected in Exeter to
mark his exploits - a rare honour for a still living man.
The engraving
on the base reads: "He saved Natal" - and despite the delays
and setbacks - that is true.
Historians
may be divided - some believe he was not fit to command a large force
in battle - others maintain he became the scapegoat for failures throughout
the British military command.
It has been
estimated that the chance of surviving a Victoria Cross act is 1 in 10
- and General Buller flouted the laws of averages many times - his winning
the VC is testament to that.
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